Jan Łaski or Johannes à Lasco (1499 – 8 January 1560) was a PolishCalvinist reformer. Owing to his influential work in England (1548–1553) during the English Reformation, he is known to the English-speaking world by the Anglicised form John à Lasco (or less commonly, John Laski).[1]
Life
Jan Łaski was born in 1499 as the second son of Jarosław Łaski, the voivode of Sieradz, and Zuzanna of Bąkowa Góra.[2][3] Following Hermann Dalton's claims in his nineteenth-century biography of Łaski,[4] a number of historians have identified the Łaski family's castle in Łask as his place of birth,[5] although recent Polish scholarship concludes that the exact location cannot be ascertained.[6]
After his family's fall from political power and prestige, Łaski, a learned priest, went in 1523 to Basel, where he became a close friend of Erasmus and Zwingli.
In 1542, he became pastor of a Protestant church at Emden, East Frisia. A public library in Emden is named after him (https://www.jalb.de/22758-438-0-73.html), it received the 'Bibliothek des Jahres' (Library of the year) award of the German Library Association in 2001 (https://www.bibliotheksverband.de/bibliothek-des-jahres#BibliothekdesJahres2001). Shortly after his stay in Emden he went to England, where in 1550 he was superintendent of the Strangers' Church of London and had some influence on ecclesiastical affairs in the reign of Edward VI.[9]
In 1556, he was recalled to Poland, where he became secretary to King Sigismund II and was a leader in Calvinism.[11]
His contributions to the Calvinist churches were the establishment of church government in theory and practice, a denial of any distinction between ministers and elders except in terms of who could teach and administer the sacraments. A meeting with the Anabaptist Menno Simons in 1544 led Łaski to coin the term "Mennonites" for the followers of Simons.[12][13]
Forma ac ratio (1550) -- A "Form and Rationale" for the liturgy of the Stranger churches in London. Possibly influenced the 1552 Book of Common Prayer, John Knox's Scottish order, the Middleburg ordinal, the 1563 German Palatinate order, and the "forms and prayers" in Pieter Dathenus' psalter, which was influential in Dutch Calvinist churches.
Johannes a Lasco, Opera (Works), ed. Abraham Kuyper (Amsterdam: F. Muller, 1866).
Cameron, Euan (2012). The European Reformation (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199547852.
Dalton, Hermann (1886). John A Lasco: His Earlier Life and Labours. Translated by Evans, Maurice J. London: Hodder and Stoughton. [English translation of Dalton, Hermann (1881). Johannes a Lasco Beitrag zur Reformationsgeschichte Polens Deutschlands und Englands (in German). Gotha: Friedrich Andreas Perthes.]
Eaves, Richard Glen; Carter, William A. (1979). "John à Lasco: A Polish Religious Reformer in England, 1550-1553". Journal of Thought. 14 (4): 311–323. eISSN 2375-270X. ISSN 0022-5231. JSTOR 42588808. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
Janakowski, Marcin (2018). "Between Facts and Panegyrics. Tracing the Youth and Peregrinations of Hieronim, Jan and Stanisław Łaski". Przegląd Nauk Historycznych [Review of Historical Sciences]. XVII (3). Łódź: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego: 67–101. doi:10.18778/1644-857X.17.03.03. hdl:11089/27177. ISSN 1644-857X. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
Lindberg, Carter (2010). The European Reformations (2nd ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9781405180672.
Sources
Henning P. Juergens, Johannes a Lasco in Ostfriesland: Der Werdegang eines europaeischen Reformators (Tuebingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2002) (Spaetmittelalter und Reformation, Neue Reihe, 18), . viii + 428 S.
Becker, J., Gemeindeordnung und Kirchenzucht. Johannes a Lascos Kirchenordnung für London (1555) und die reformierte Konfessionsbildung (Leiden, Brill, 2007) (Studies in Medieval and Reformation Traditions, 122), xvi, 592 S.
Michael S. Springer, Restoring Christ's Church: John a Lasco and the Forma ac ratio (Aldershot, Ashgate, 2007) (St Andrews Studies in Reformation History), 198 pp.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jan Łaski (Johannes a Lasco).
Dr George M Ella, "Jan Laski. Pan-European Reformer." Mülheim